Showing posts with label community. Show all posts
Showing posts with label community. Show all posts

Monday, September 05, 2016

Good things, September edition


One of my favorite things in life is working with intercultural young people. Or, in this case, young people in the process of becoming (more) intercultural. It is such a huge leap of faith for this crew of six (waiting for one more to get his visa and come from China) to have traveled so far outside of their comfort zone, and come to Colombia - from Mozambique, India, Indonesia, China, the United States, and South Africa. The past two weeks have been an intense but wonderful time working with them in their in-country orientation, learning about Colombian history, politics, and churches, as well as a host of topics specific to the work they will be doing here. I have been very pleased with their can-do attitudes, curiosity, and willingness to serve. Off they go today!

Monday, March 07, 2016

Chuarrancho

I just got back from a week in Guatemala, my 5th visit in 15 years. One thing we did there was visit the community of Chuarrancho; the link there is to a web site in Spanish, but the photographs are beautiful even if you don't speak the language and a number of people we met there are featured.

It's an amazing story of a group of indigenous people nearly having their ancestral lands stolen out from under them, and getting back their titles. We sat before a double row of elders, the women in their traditional dress, all holding traditional staffs of office that had been revived during this process. Each introduced him or herself by name, then by office: "Ancestral authority."

I admit that I cried freely hearing these words. These people are so humble and have suffered so much, for centuries, including a nationwide attempt at their genocide. To see them proudly taking up the mantle of their ancestral authority, and having it recognized by the state, is an incredible testimony to their courage, tenacity, and deep attachment to the land.

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Urgent Action

It's been a hectic couple of weeks and blogging, once again, got away from me. We've been fairly preoccupied with a crisis involving one of our partner organizations on the Caribbean Coast (these photos are all from my visit there last November). In  nutshell, a community leader and organizer who has worked for decades to promote non-violent social change is under threat, and another has been imprisoned.


I remember as a young(er) person, staying with my Grandma Beth in NY, and seeing her at her desk late at night writing letters for Amnesty International. As a budding social activist type I remember feeling so impressed and so proud of her. Now I feel grateful - to her and to the many people who take time for this kind of action. It might not seem like it makes much of a difference, but it can - the difference between life and death.


I won't try to explain the whole story here - in fact, there are aspects of the story that cannot at this time be made public because to do so would put people's lives in further danger. I've been spending most of my work time in the past 10 days working with an amazing network of people (who understand much more than I do about the situation and about international advocacy processes) to discern what exactly can and should be said, and to whom, and via what means, under a strong sense of urgency to have it all done three days ago.


So here are some good things to read:



It's been incredibly humbling and moving to see the responses beginning to flood in. Like over 1500 signatures collected online already. Ricardo is a dearly beloved and greatly respected in peacebuilding circles around the world. And in Colombia.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Retiro en la Costa - Retreat on the Coast

We just got back from our team retreat on the Caribbean Coast - so nice! Hot, but nice. (In unrelated news, I just got my birthday camera - thanks Dad! This is almost the last batch of photos with that ugly black corner.) We flew 1 hour to Monteria, then took a van about 2 hours to CoveƱas. These kids are getting to be very seasoned travelers!

It was kind of nice that Valerie insisted on wearing long sleeves, long pants, and socks the whole time, as that helped limit her sun and mosquito exposure. Nonetheless, she got 17 mosquito bites on one hand alone (not to mention 7 on her face and several on the other hand).

It was very hot. The hotel pool was so nice. We had a mix of work, relaxation, and worship (on Palm Sunday).

Monday was a quiet day spent re-acclimating to Bogota (Valerie said "I'm so happy to be back in Colombia!") and receiving the Jantzi grandparents, who arrived here a few hours after we did Sunday night!

Unfortunately Valerie woke up sick today and has been throwing up and shivering. Right now she is sleeping, thankfully. Gabriel is fine, full of energy, and Terry has gone to the office to do a little work while the grandparents putter around helping me do small tasks at the house. I'm so glad it's holy week so we can rest up a bit.

Friday, May 18, 2012

Join something

What a long, strange week it’s been.

Last Sunday, tired and cranky after the birthday party, we went to church and saw a Roma lady who has been coming off and on since winter with her two little children. I can’t always understand her very well, but as we talked I got that her home has been destroyed by the police, and she’s been sleeping on the street with her kids.

I didn’t know what to say or do, but I made sure that a couple other people there knew the situation, and I saw several people (who actually speak fluent Albanian, and a few who actually are Albanian) talking with her and working to connect her with some emergency services.

As we walked home, I took a long look towards the lake – we pass by that way – and saw that the tiny Roma village that has been evolving just below the dam is gone. Completely. I mean, there’s not a single rope or sheet of plastic left.

Last weekend we’d noticed a police sweep through the big park by the lake, ejecting all informal/unlicensed vendors – even breaking apart cement structures with crowbars – and then when I’d noticed the silence of the streets where Roma children often hang out playing and begging, I’d thought about this woman who comes to our church and wondered if they were ok.

We knew she lived there, by the dam, because we’d walked past one day, coming back from the amusement park, and she’d run out from under the old cypress trees that sheltered their makeshift dwellings to say hello. We stopped to chat, and very quickly she and we were surrounded by a small crowd of women and children staring curiously. One woman, off to the side, held out her hand asking for money and was instantly shushed by all the others. A little girl who had gathered up discarded mimosa blooms was sitting on a cement block trying to sell the withering flowers. It didn’t take long to get to the end of our language ability and then we went on our way.

Since then we’ve occasionally run into women who recognize us from that single encounter and enthusiastically say “hi” (and sometimes ask for money).

This little Roma community was never anything but precarious. It was situated on a large vacant space below the dam (so it has to be really damp most of the time, possibly even swampy). On one side is a sports complex, on the other a car wash, and below it is a dump filled with rubble and trash. The homes were built of discarded pieces of plywood, cardboard, plastic, tied together with rope. But laundry was hung to dry on lines strung everywhere, and I’d noticed one house had a row of potted plants along one side. And they had those lovely old cypress trees (that are still there). One day when we went past I noticed three young men hanging out with a boom box, smoking and dancing a little. It may have been a makeshift squatter camp on a dump site, but it was their home.

It reminded me  a lot of the townships in South Africa, although obviously not anything near as big. But the dynamics are also similar. People pushed to the margins of society by those who have control of the land and the resources, making do as best they can with what they have, constantly being beaten down because of prejudice.

I feel helpless and stupid in the face of this, of things like this. The root causes of these problems are so deep, and my understanding such a small sliver. I feel frustrated by my lack of knowledge of the language and culture. I also know the complications involved in trying to “help” people in these kinds of situations.

On one level, it would look so simple – we have extra room, why couldn’t we invite the woman and her children to live with us until she finds her feet? But the thing is… it’s not just her, is it? It’s also her husband and two teenaged children. It’s her whole extended family and the literal and metaphorical baggage that they’d bring. It’s also the centuries of prejudice and discrimination that don’t allow her people to find employment in the regulated, formal sector. It’s also that dark side of charity, the power you gain over someone when you give them a gift they cannot repay, their indebtedness to you, and how that warps relationships.

It also frightened me how quickly I stopped thinking about this woman and her children. I rained for four days this week, and I did think about her during pauses in my day, wondering where she was sheltering from the rain, wondering where the others from her little community have gone. But by Tuesday I’d lost the feeling of dreadful sadness and worry I’d felt on Sunday, the outrage I’d felt when I saw how cleanly swept was the vacant area where they had been living.

Shpresa asked me, when I told her the story, “but where did they come from? Where were they before they made their houses there?” I don’t know. There’s so much I don’t know.

We’re here such a short time, overall. I don’t know what I can do to try to bring good into this situation. But, having met this lady and her children, having sat with them in church, having acknowledged simply through saying good morning our common humanity, I feel like a turd for doing nothing.  

Terry gives me the advice I always give students going through this range of emotions - "join something." I guess I have to figure out what.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

One Month

It's been a whole month since we said goodbye to Harrisonburg and hello to Tirana. It still feels like we just got here!

Things I miss, in no particular order:
  • knowing where to buy the things I need/want, knowing how to get there, and knowing whether the price is reasonable or not.
  • being able to understand what people are saying
  • RECYCLING
  • Valerie and Gabriel's grandparents (all 4 of you!)
  • Mr. J's
  • dinners with WSK and his parents
  • my yarn
  • all my books!!!
Things I really like about Tirana:
  • seeing the sun set over the river
  • the view from our apartment (seriously, if you could see what I'm seeing right now...)
  • the kindness of strangers who help us navigate the stroller up and down stairs
  • the language - even though I don't understand it yet, I'm learning, and it's really really fun.
  • Shpresa
  • Valerie sleeping through the night and taking regular, consistent naps
  • beginning to lose the baby weight with all the walking around carrying G.
More later - I think G is waking up - got to run!

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Four weeks since we left the US

Cribbed from an e-mail to my folks:

Terry has gone to Kosovo overnight for an event there honoring Mother Teresa. It's the anniversary of her beatification and a national holiday in Albania. Anyway, the president of Kosovo wanted to recognize World Vision (their Kosovo program is administered under WV Albania) as part of the event but the WV director wasn't able to go, so he asked Terry to go instead as an interchangeable foreigner :-) Terry even bought a suit in the local market here because he didn't bring any suits from the US... (Rosanne and Vern are now looking smug...)! The funny thing is that the president of Kosovo recently resigned so a stand-in for him is going to be presenting the award as well :-) Terry will be back tomorrow.

I asked Shpresa to come over this afternoon just so it wouldn't be such a long day without Terry home in the evening. She is such a big help. Yesterday she did a lot of cleaning so this afternoon I just asked her to help me study Albanian. Valerie even let Shpresa feed her some yoghurt so that was encouraging too. I felt kind of bad after I realized that I'd asked her to work on a holiday, but she seemed happy to come.

Tomorrow I'm supposed to meet a friend of a friend who lives in Tirana, we'll see if it all works out. Thursday I'm supposed to meet Terry's boss's wife who is Swiss, to go to the Botanical gardens. Friday I have no social plans.

Oh, and we discovered that we have earwigs in the apartment. Not a huge problem but they are really ugly! We didn't know what they were and a little internet research helped us identify them. I googled "common household pests" and looked around til I saw a picture that matched the bugs we have. So that's what an earwig is, I always wondered.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Shpressa = wonderful

On Monday (it already seems so long ago!) an American woman I met at church here - her husband is their youth pastor - introduced me to Shpressa, an Albanian lady who will be helping me out a couple times a week at home.

I LOVE her!

She's been working for expat families for fifteen years, and is going to help us out with just daily living stuff - some cleaning, some child care (mostly Gabriel at first, until Valerie gets used to her), some language practice. Shpressa speaks a little bit of English, but she's very good at understanding what I'm trying to say, making it into a real sentence in Shqip,* saying it slowly and clearly, and then making me repeat it back to her several times. Completely awesome. She also strikes me as a very compassionate person, and has adapted her head-nod to the American style (Albanians nod "yes" by wagging the head side to side, instead of chin up and down) which makes it easier for us foreigners to understand her.

So Monday afternoon she helped me fold laundry and wash dishes, then gave Gabriel a bath while I ran to the grocery store solo - Valerie was taking a nap this whole time so we haven't done that introduction yet. I'm so happy that she's going to be helping us!

Oh, and here's further proof that she's fabulous - her birthday is the same day as Gabriel's - 7/7! Amazing.

-----
* Shqip = Albanian for "Albanian." The 'q' is pronounced sort of like a "shch."

Monday, July 05, 2010

48 hours


Not to make anyone nervous or anything (Terry!), but I just looked at the clock and realized that 48 hours from now - unless I go into labor before then - we'll be in the OR about to meet our son. This ever-present awareness has made it hard to sleep the last few nights as we lie awake thinking about names... deadlines (Terry)... to-do lists and the physical recovery ahead (me)...

I am so thankful that we made it to this date, given the scare we had in May. 7 weeks of bedrest has been both a blessing and a marathon of waiting. But here we are. For me at least it's a lot less scary than last time. I feel more confident, knowledgeable, and prepared. I'm SO glad that I was able to do bedrest at home and not in the hospital this time. I am so thankful that my parents were able to be here taking care of me and Valerie and for all the help we have had from my in-laws and our babysitter! Thankful to all the people who have brought meals over - some more than once - and taken the time to check in and see how we're doing.

It's hard to believe, as I feel Baby Boy kicking around inside, that so little time is left in this gestation. I want to make sure to be mindful of these moments and enjoy them.

Friday, May 21, 2010

still waiting

I took my re-do sample to the lab this morning, and they said they should have results "by the end of the day." So meantime, I'm just going to rest. It's been hard to sleep at night because I wake up to go to the bathroom, and then sometimes I have a hard time falling asleep again because my mind is spinning thinking about everything. But I thought to myself this morning, "I guess this is my labor." I will probably never have the chance to experience a normal labor and delivery, but this processing, preparation, and trying to work with my body is the closest I will get. And it is "work."

Overall, the emotional journey has been easier this time than last. I have a better idea what to expect. I'm not as terrified of the idea of a cesarean as I was last time (even though it wasn't what I wanted either time, and I was hoping to try for a VBAC with this one...). I like my doctors. What is most distressing to me is the idea of being away from Valerie for a long period of time (well, that and concern that Baby Boy Jantzi - aka BBJ - will end up in the NICU) and worrying about how she'll cope with me not being here for the morning and evening routines. But at the same time I know she will be well and lovingly cared for - we have a veritable village coming together with both sets of grandparents going to be here plus our very capable babysitter who V. is quite attached to as well.

There has been an overflow of loving support through the friends and family networks that I appreciate so much. People I haven't seen or talked to in years sending good wishes and praying for us. Thank you all so much. Your love is palpable.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Laury

Public service announcement:
By the way, the Preeclampsia Foundation has a very informative web site if you want to learn more about this condition.

***

This morning I called my therapist's office to see about either canceling my Monday morning appointment, or doing it over the phone. The office receptionist said she had bad news. Dr. G. passed away two weeks ago, just three days after I last saw her.

I'm kind of in shock, it really doesn't seem real. I have such a vivid memory of sitting in her office, the needlepoint pillows, the way she would always hand me a tissue. I never got a chance to ask her about the whales and dolphins that populated her space - figurines, sculptures in glass and metal and wood, pictures on the walls, on coffee mugs, even her earrings. Obviously they meant something important to her and I never found out what.

She has a 7-year-old daughter.

I wanted to state here, since I can't tell her in person, how much she has meant to me over the years since I first started seeing her in 2004; how much she has helped me, and how specific things she said to me still stick in my mind like mantras and help me cope with daily life. It really doesn't seem real to me that she's gone.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Church

So I joined the church today - although I was baptized at 17, this is the first time I've ever officially been a member of an official church. It was kind of a last-minute decision (literally - I made up my mind and called the pastor at noon on Friday, just as the bulletins were going to press - but got my name in the program) and wrote my confession of faith at 10 p.m. on Saturday night. Here it is:

When I was five years old, an older friend led me in a prayer to ask Jesus into my heart. When I was fourteen, I recommitted my life to Christ and I was baptized at seventeen by a visiting minister at the mission in Peru where we lived. I understood then that as I continued to grow up, I needed to periodically reorient my spiritual life along with my growing understanding and knowledge. In college I found myself working through a number of questions and doubts as my simple understanding of God and life and faith was continually challenged. As a young adult I felt strong and secure in a deepening spiritual life.

About 12 years ago, a series of painful tragedies in the lives of my loved ones derailed that sense of security, and for a long time I have felt adrift and without anchor as my beliefs were pared down to a bare core. Today, I feel a renewed sense of purpose and freedom in my faith. I am prepared to affirm the doctrines of this fellowship, and to commit to walking in the light with you all as together we seek to know God more fully, and to live out his love and justice in this world.

It's kind of funny, since I've been attending this church now for almost 10 years, ever since we moved to the Valley, and have served on I think 3 different committees. I was worship leader one time and helped serve Communion once as well. Terry has been a member since high school, and Valerie was dedicated here when she was 3 months old. We're planning to dedicate the new baby here before we leave for Albania (oh, I haven't posted about that yet, have I? I'll have to do that soon). I didn't want to be the only person in my family who didn't formally "belong" I guess!

There was a nice potluck after the service and all the new members (8 of us) got a potted plant and didn't have to bring anything, which was nice :-).